Jennifer C. Nash,
"On Difficulty: Intersectionality as Feminist Labor"
(page 3 of 4)
On Good, Hard Work
While intersectionality is considered hard work, it is also
celebrated work. it is routinely described as feminism's "most
important contribution," and its complexity has become the hallmark of
excellence in feminist scholarship.
Because intersectionality is characterized as good, hard work, it is
now commonplace for feminist scholarship to critique other scholarship
for its failure to be sufficiently intersectional or to conclude
with calls for more intersectionality. These pleas for more
intersectionality are often originalist in their nature. They trace
intersectionality's roots to Kimberlé Crenshaw (even as they
often recognize that intersectionality conceptually pre-dated Crenshaw)
as a way of grounding their call for more
intersectionality.[14]
These texts regularly begin by citing Crenshaw's traffic metaphor.
Darren Rosenblum, for example, begins his work on "queer
intersectionality" by quoting Crenshaw, and then advocates a more
expansive intersectionality which takes queerness into account "since
most queers face multiple aspects of discrimination, as women, as people
of color, as poor people, as cross-gendered people, and as sexual
subversives."[15]
Similarly, post-intersectional scholar Darren Hutchinson notes, "the
most important substantive addition that multidimensionality and other
race-sexuality models bring to intersectionality scholarship is the
examination of heterosexist subordination (alongside race, gender, and
class), a topic that is omitted from much of the intersectionality
literature."[16]
For both Rosenblum and Hutchinson, realizing the
promise of intersectionality requires adding more intersections to the
analytic frame. Using Crenshaw's framework—the idea of cars colliding
in the intersection—these scholars add sexuality, and other
intersections, to the mix, examining how race, gender, class and
sexuality operate together, producing a particularly complex traffic
flow.
Under this logic intersectionality becomes a remedy for exclusivity
and hegemony rather than a metaphor. That is, if the problem is
feminist (or anti-racist) inattention to particular subjects'
experiences, the "cure" is studying more intersections, and crafting
more complex intersectional frameworks. Calls for "more"
intersectionality treat the labor of attending to multiple intersections
as its own value added, and suggest that the consideration of ever-more
traffic-clogged intersections will yield a greater truth about the
experiences of multiply-marginalized subjects. Ultimately, the
attention to Crenshaw's traffic analogy as experiential rather
than metaphorical has tended to constrain the feminist imagination,
making an attention to more intersections rather than a deep
interrogation of identity the hallmark of good, hard work.
Rather than reading intersectionality as actually describing
how identity operates, I advocate reading intersectionality as a
metaphor, as one illustration of how structures of domination might
cooperate to maintain their power. The framework of metaphor invites
scholars to interrogate assumptions, and encourages scholars to ask the
important, and still under-asked, questions that post-intersectional
scholars Robert Chang and Jerome McCristal Culp Jr. pose, "How does one
pay attention to the points of intersection? How many intersections are
there? Is the idea of an intersection the right
analogy?"[17] Rather
than presuming the accuracy of intersectionality, Chang and Culp suggest
interrogating the very metaphor and invite an unleashing of the feminist
imagination to envision alternative ways that identity and oppression
might operate.
Certainly intersectionality's hold on the feminist imagination is, in
part, because of its visual resonance. Many of us now teach
intersectionality by asking students to diagram what it means. Students
draw configurations of roads: traditional intersections, four way stop
signs, rotaries, and complex configurations of roadways that have yet to
be constructed. Yet all of this work on
intersectionality-as-fact, rather than
intersectionality-as-metaphor has given it an empirical status,
and a kind of hegemony within feminist theory despite Crenshaw's own
concession that intersectionality is meant as a "provisional
concept linking contemporary politics with women of color," as an
invitation for re-conceptualization.[18]
Rather than producing a "veritable theoretical industry" rooted in
intersectionality, I encourage us to be conscious of how our theoretical
frameworks can illuminate as much as they
elide.[19] Intersectionality
is good work: it is rooted in a commitment to putting
multiply-marginalized subjects' experiences at the center of our
theory-making and organizing, and it is concerned with exposing how
structures of domination cooperate and collude to ensure their continued
power. But this doesn't mean that the only way we can conceptualize
multiply-marginalized subjects' experiences is through the traffic
clogged intersection metaphor, nor does it mean that simply considering
more intersections will undermine the "problems" of essentialism that
plagued earlier feminist theory.
Instead, treating intersectionality as a metaphor invites us to test
the concept empirically, placing our theory into conversation with lived
experiences of subjectivity. It also encourages us to consider
precisely the moments when our intersection metaphor is imperfect. We
can begin to ask questions like: When do we experience our identities
along a single-axis? What are the social, historical, and contextual
conditions that give rise to us experiencing identity in a multi-axis
way? How do intersectionality and the contextuality of identity
intersect?
While imagining identity outside of intersectionality will give us
important new analytical frameworks for studying subjectivity and power,
these explorations will also allow us to productively fulfill the
promise of interdisciplinarity that stands at the heart of feminist
studies. Curiously, most of the work that explores, complicates, and
unsettles intersectionality has emerged from a vibrant group of legal
scholars invested in "post intersectionality." Yet because of the
continued power that departments have in structuring institutional and
intellectual life in the American academy, these innovative works rarely
leave the legal academy. My hope is that imagining identity outside of
intersectionality will also require us to imagine the very structure of
our institutions in new ways, prioritizing and celebrating disciplinary
promiscuity, departmental border-crossings, and transdisciplinary
conversations.
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